If Sheldon Cooper watched his own episode, he would immediately notice the compression artifacts. He would lecture you on the efficiency of the Coding Tree Units (CTUs) in HEVC versus the macroblocks of AVC.
He tapped his fingers on the desk. He appreciated the irony. He was watching a memory of himself, compressed and decompressed in real-time, stripped of redundant data, preserving only the essential information—the narrative truth. young sheldon s01e20 hevc
"Interesting," Sheldon murmured, pausing the video to examine a specific frame. "The bitrate on this encode is handling the motion artifacts during the cafeteria scene with remarkable clarity. Usually, dark scenes suffer from macro-blocking in lower bitrates, but the HEVC codec is preserving the texture of the bologna sandwich with startling fidelity." If Sheldon Cooper watched his own episode, he
"Hevc," Sheldon whispered to himself, the acronym tasting like a particularly satisfying lemon bar. "High Efficiency Video Coding. A successor to H.264. A marvel of compression algorithms." He appreciated the irony